23 THE RICHNESS OF BEING
“tings can get very lively at times.”
I asked roversy.
“ell, ed on us by one of your countrymen,” ly, andopened a y reference aining illustrations of mosses ableceristic to tructed eye y one to anot,” apping a moss, “used to be one genus, Drepanocladus. No’s been reorganized intotorfia, and acoulis.”
“And did t lead to blows?” I asked perouch hopefully.
“ell, it made sense. It made perfect sense. But it meant a lot of reordering of collectionsand it put all t of date for a time, so t of, you know, grumbling.”
Mosses offer mysteries as o moss peopleanyiring type called anfordensis, y in California and later also found gro tip of England, but ered anyo exist in tions is anybody’s guess. “It’snoher revision.”
e nodded tfully.
must be compared o make sure t it been recorded already. tion must be ten and illustrationsprepared and t publisable journal. takesless tietury a great age for moss taxonomy. Mucury’s ed to untangling tions left beeentury.
t ing. (You may recall t C moss man.) One aptly named Englis, ed Britis ributed to tinction of several species. But it is to sucs t Len Ellis’s collection is one of t compreo large folded ss of orian script. Some, for all Victorian botanist, unveiler of Broion and tany department for its first ty-oneyears until in lustrous old mas sostrikingly fine t I remarked upon them.
“Oifying a recent purc to s tfully, as if for t time in a longw know hem in bryology,” he added.